Marcus Freeman Reveals How Notre Dame Can Win A National Championship
Although the Notre Dame Fighting Irish advanced to the College Football Playoff National Championship last season, they struggled to keep the game close against the Ohio State Buckeyes before a late final push came up short.
In a sit-down interview on "Next Up with Adam Breneman," Notre Dame's Marcus Freeman discussed several topics, including his start as the Fighting Irish's head coach, their early-season loss to Northern Illinois last season and how the college football powerhouse can navigate its way to a national championship.
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"This year, we showed that we can be as good as any team in the country," said Freeman.
"I go back, and I watch the Ohio State game. How can we improve schematically? What mistakes did we make in that game? Those are the things you can control. The other thing is you always want to increase the talent. That's the important aspect of any organization, it's talent.
"We have to continue to increase the best players in the country who fit in this place and who value the things we value here. Then you have to continue to develop them; how do we develop you as an individual. ... What type of culture do we have? How can we continue to attract team-first guys when the world is me-first? ...
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"That's the three areas we have to continue to focus on: enhancing talent, enhancing development and enhancing culture."
Notre Dame head coach Marcus Freeman© Michael Clubb/South Bend Tribune / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
In Steven Lassan's college football rankings for next season, he slots the Fighting Irish at No. 5 behind Texas, Ohio State, Penn State and Georgia.
According to On3, Notre Dame had the No. 12 recruiting class in 2025 and is ranked No. 11 thus far for the 2026 class.
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New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Jahmai Jones, a father's memory and a Detroit legacy that lives on
DETROIT — Jahmai Jones has three words stitched on his outfield glove. Flip the switch. That's one of the mantras his late father, Andre, always preached. He taught his children to be kind and compassionate off the field. But when the lights came on, when the game started, he wanted them to be focused and intense. Advertisement Like that glove, there are other reminders. Jahmai still has a Bible verse in his social media bios. Matthew 10:16, a verse Andre often recited to his children. I am sending you out like sheep among wolves. Therefore be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves. He owns a pendant inscribed with a message that reminds him of his father. Those are the small things. The daily reminders of who Andre Jones was and what he stood for. 'I don't know,' Jahmai said this weekend, 'if I've had a single day when I haven't given thought to something or something hasn't come up that I'd love to share with him or talk about or ask for advice. Doesn't matter. It's every day.' Andre was a football player at Notre Dame from 1987 to 1990. He won a national title with the Fighting Irish, then played as a defensive end for the Detroit Lions in 1992. Jahmai was 13 the day it happened, the day everything changed. Andre passed out in the bathroom. The ambulance came and whisked him to the hospital. At first, the family hoped it was something minor. Then they learned Andre suffered a brain aneurysm. There was no brain activity. Like that, he was gone at age 42. 'It's just a hard thing to explain to someone who hasn't experienced it,' Jahmai said. 'It was just very foreign. It was very foreign to me until it happened. Once it happened, you're like, 'Man, there's all these emotions that come with it.' All these experiences you have to go through.' Jahmai, one of six children, was about to start his freshman year of high school in Georgia. He was old enough to understand, to process, to remember. But the thing about grief is that it's an ongoing emotion. No set endpoint. Not a linear progression. It's a loop, one that can go back or forward or repeat without warning. The feelings and memories might fade. Then it can catch you out of nowhere, hitting all fresh and new again. Advertisement It's not always sadness. Not even pain. Maybe just a thought, an idea, a reflection and a reminder of something no longer there. 'I think now, especially, I'm 27,' Jahmai said. 'Thirteen years later (my understanding) is a lot different. But the thoughts, still thinking about him, have not changed from 13 to now.' A post shared by Jahmai Jones (@jamjones7) It's there in the lonely quiet of daily life. Thoughts, mantras, pendants. Sometimes it's more palpable in the big moments, when you want to share something with someone who is gone. Jahmai thought of that a lot on Friday when he was called up to play for the Detroit Tigers, here in the same city where his father and older brother, T.J., both played for the Detroit Lions. T.J. was a receiver from 2015 to 2018, had 64 receptions over four seasons. That's the last time Jahmai was in Detroit, across the street at Ford Field watching his brother play. Another brother, Malachi, played in the Arena Football League and the CFL. 'Detroit's got a special place in my heart just because of the family side,' he said. 'Being able to do it myself and add to it, it's everything I can ask for.' Jahmai thought of Dad soon after he got the call and learned he was coming to Detroit. A car service picked him up from a minor-league series in Columbus, Ohio. He scrambled to pack his hotel room, grab his baseball gear and pack it all in the car. 'I got all the necessities,' he said. 'I got my wallet. Got my phone. Got my keys. Got my baseball stuff. Everything else, I'll figure it out later. If the clothes get left, the clothes get left.' He thought of his father as he finally arrived at Comerica Park and dove straight into preparing for the game. He credits his parents as the primary reason he is here. Andre was a larger-than-life influence. His mother, Michele, raised the kids as a single mother after Andre's death. For all the tiny reminders, Jones said he honors his father the most by the way he tries to live his life. Advertisement 'How he wanted his kids to carry themselves throughout the world, it's a testament to him and my mom,' Jones said. 'Love the people that I love and be caring to others. That's all a reflection of him.' And he surely thought of his father in the aftermath of a thrilling game Friday night, one when he was summoned from the bench to pinch hit in the eighth inning. He hit a home run on the first pitch he saw. The Tigers beat the Chicago Cubs 3-1 in a matchup of two of the league's best teams. In a series in which the Tigers took two of three from the powerful Cubs, Jones was the prevailing story of the weekend. 'I thought about it a lot last night,' Jones said Saturday morning. 'Talking with my wife, talking with my family. It's kind of a full-circle moment.' It's been a strange year for Jones. There was the serendipity of signing a minor-league deal with the Tigers, of having the chance to carry on his family's Detroit sports legacy. The Tigers identified Jones as a valuable right-handed bat who could play all over the diamond, the type of player who very much fits their M.O. 'We chased him hard from the very beginning of minor-league free agency,' Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. 'Our front office did a nice job of identifying him but also seeking him on how we could maximize his skill set.' Jones showed up to spring training on the fringes. A second-round pick in 2015, Jones is now playing for his sixth organization. He quickly impressed and made a case for himself. He appeared, for a moment, to have a very real chance of making the team as injuries hit the rest of the Tigers' outfield. It didn't work out that way. The Tigers broke camp without him. Jones went down to Triple-A Toledo. 'He arguably had the best spring to not break with our team,' Hinch said. 'We didn't configure the roster with him, and in typical Jahmai fashion, didn't get bitter, didn't get mad, didn't waste his time in the minor leagues.' Advertisement Indeed, Jones kept grinding and working away. He saw a chance in this organization, even when others got called before him. Maybe there's another lesson intertwined with all this. Maybe one that — kind of like grief — won't fully make sense until years down the road. Because when the Tigers sent down Andy Ibáñez to find his swing and the chance finally came, Jones was ready. On the field before Friday's game, he bounced around with a smile. 'All I want to do is contribute,' he said. He waited on the bench all game. Talked with injured Tiger Matt Vierling about how to stay ready. Hinch called his number, inserted him for powerful left-handed hitter Kerry Carpenter in the bottom of the eighth inning. The first pitch was a curveball, hanging and ripe. Jones connected, sent it looping toward the left-field fence. For a moment, he didn't think he got enough. '(Ian) Happ was going back on it and was jogging, jogging, going back to the fence,' Jahmai said. 'I was like, 'Dang, I really got too under it.'' But Happ kept running. He finally reached the wall and ran out of room. The ball kept soaring, too. It cleared the fence. 'I'm proud of him,' Hinch said. 'I'm happy for him.' No matter what happens from here, Jones will have that moment. Another memory. A legacy that continues, in ways big and small. 'I'm still able to enjoy every single big moment I'm able to have,' Jahmai said. 'It's just when you're wanting to share it with people you love, the people you love are always at the forefront. No matter if they're here or not, you always think about them.'
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Lincoln Riley Has Awkward Response About Potential Discontinuation of Iconic Rivalry
Lincoln Riley Has Awkward Response About Potential Discontinuation of Iconic Rivalry originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The USC Trojans and Notre Dame Fighting Irish have had one of the longest-standing traditions in college football with them matching up every year since 1926, besides years in World War II and COVID. Advertisement Now, one of the biggest rivalries in college football may not be playing in 2026, as there has not been a scheduled meeting between the two prestigious schools. Trojans head coach Lincoln Riley was asked about the situation, and his response was awkward given how big of a rivalry this is. "We will (comment) at the appropriate time," said Riley when asked if he wanted to speak on the matter. Southern California Trojans head coach Lincoln Riley.© Kirby Lee-Imagn Images One of the biggest topics of conversations in the offseason of this college football season has been the potential discontinuation of this rivalry, and practically a 'no comment' response from Riley has fans confused. Advertisement Notre Dame head coach Marcus Freeman had a great reaction, and has said he wants to play against USC every year due to how good the rivalry is for college football. "That rivalry, USC-Notre Dame, before I even got to Notre Dame, everybody watched that game. Everyone remembers moments from that game that just stick out in my mind," said Freeman. Riley has been under serious scrutiny recently, and a caller on "The Paul Finebaum Show" asked if the Trojans could regain their college football dominance, to which he had a harsh response. "I do believe USC is capable because there is so much to offer there. They just happen to have a fraud as their head coach," said Finebaum. Advertisement The Trojans head coach will have every ability to prove Finebaum wrong as he has the No. 1 recruiting class in the country in 2026. All that is left for that season is what will happen to one of the best rivalries in all of sports. Related: USC Running Back Makes Major NIL Announcement on Monday Related: USC Trojans 2026 Recruiting Numbers Reveal Dominant Statistic This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 4, 2025, where it first appeared.


Fox Sports
9 hours ago
- Fox Sports
Denny Hamlin wins Michigan, taunts crowd while awaiting third child
BROOKLYN, Mich. — Denny Hamlin could feel nerves during the race Sunday at Michigan International Speedway. His fiancée, Jordan Fish, was six days past due with their third child and Hamlin and his team had decided if they got past Lap 50 of the 200-lap race, he wouldn't be told if she went into labor. Things worked out for Hamlin. He won at Michigan and 90 minutes after the race, was still at the track doing media. He talked about why he needs to be at the birth, baby names … and fierce taunts of the crowd in Michigan. That's Hamlin, living amid chaos and then creating even more for himself. "I don't want to be so ho-hum with winning that it's boring because then I lose my drive," Hamlin said. Hamlin, who has a group of friends who are Ohio State fans, gave the "O" sign to the Michigan crowd and resurrected his line that he told his father he wouldn't use anymore as he crowed to the crowd: "I beat your favorite driver." The boos reigned and Hamlin chuckled. "I do thrive on it just simply because you feel like you've got 60,000 people that are rooting against you," Hamlin said. "When you have that, it just feels really, really good and gratifying to prove them wrong. "I love that feeling." Hamlin had spent Saturday night in Michigan as Fish had not had any labor symptoms. Fish posted an Instagram story late in the race that she was at home. "I felt decent enough about it," Hamlin said. "We had to set some sort of cutoff of whether I was going to finish or not. "So I was very nervous last night and then this morning to getting the call because I knew I had a race-winning car after yesterday." Hamlin is known to run well, even with outside distractions. And he has the additional drama of the race team he owns (but doesn't drive for) 23XI Racing embroiled in a lawsuit against NASCAR. Earlier in the week, the team was dealt a blow in the U.S Court of Appeals and faces the prospect of the 23XI Racing cars not being chartered in a few weeks. It seems that he has been able to focus when he's at the track since that lawsuit was filed last October. The worries about missing the birth of his child, though, seemed to weigh on him more. With JGR simulator driver Ryan Truex at the track, in case he needed to leave, Hamlin knew the team was prepared for him to leave if Fish went into labor. He knew he had a strong car and had a good feeling about the race. Granted, Hamlin didn't have the fastest car. Chris Buescher probably did, but his car wiggled as he tried to run down the leaders late in the race. This cost him valuable momentum and he ended up coming across the line a second after Hamlin. \ William Byron had a strong car, but like many others, he had to save gas near the end, relinquishing the lead with less than four laps to go and then running out with a little over a lap remaining. Hamlin's team made sure he had enough fuel on the final stop to be on the attack at the end. And he executed flawlessly to the finish. And his wife was still at home, posting on Instagram near the end of the race. "I was a little nervous just because we put the Lap 50 cutoff," Hamlin said. "If it happens before Lap 50, I just go ahead and get out, just because of the time. "If it was after, I thought that by the time she gets her s--- together and gets to the hospital, all that stuff? You just never how it all turns out. But I think I can make it, as long as I had a three-hour window." It marked the third win of the year for Hamlin and his 57th career victory in his 701st start. Now it's on to Mexico City, and Hamlin indicated he would be willing to stay home if Fish has not given birth by the weekend. Obviously, it is a much longer flight from there than it would have been from Michigan to his North Carolina home. NASCAR would grant Hamlin a waiver to miss a race and consider it for medical reasons, meaning he would still make the playoffs and get to keep playoff points earned during the season. "It's the bigger picture. You never know when you'll ever have another one," Hamlin said about wanting to be home for the birth of the child. "You may not. I've been really supportive of her, the way that she wants to have this play out, which is as natural as possible. "Everyone asks, 'Why don't you just schedule, schedule, schedule?' I don't know. You've just got to let her decide in these situations. If it causes me to miss a race, it's one of 701 races that I missed and it's just not that big of a deal." His team owner, Heather Gibbs, when asked earlier about whether she was nervous for Hamlin, quipped: "It's funny, because I have four [children]. They [husbands] don't really do anything. When he gets home, he'll be home. It was good." Hamlin's response: "Well, that is true. I've been in the room before, and she needs something really hard to grab onto, and my hand is perfect for it. I'm definitely going to be there this week — hopefully — to hold her hand." The same could have been said for the way Hamlin grabbed the lead just when he needed to and held on for the victory. "He kind of thrives in chaos, right?" Heather Gibbs said. "It was true, we wanted to get him in the car. ... He's as cool as they come, that's for sure." Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily! recommended Get more from NASCAR Cup Series Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more